Ryzen 1800X Zen 1 March 2, 2017 0 years
Ryzen 3900X Zen 2 July 7, 2019 ~2.33 years
Ryzen 5950X Zen 3 November 5, 2020 ~1.33 years
Ryzen 7950X Zen 4 September 27 2022 ~1.85 years
Ryzen 9950X Zen 5 July to November 2024 guesstimate
AMD can release Zen 5 whenever they like but historically we are looking at just shy of 2 years average between major releases.
You forgot Zen+ so Zen2 gap is not actually 2.33 years. Also 2700X and 3950X existed and Zen 5 will likely use 8000 series naming ie 8950X unless AMD decides to introduce 8000 series exclusive APU's like they did with 4000 series.
No doubt, but instead of pushing expiremental technologies on users it's better to wait and do it right.
AMD's chiplets are lovely on specsheets to fill the place with cores as long as latency is hidden under the carpet.
Not that i approve E-cores, but Intel saw that AMD got away with it and got baited into their laggy path.
Yes lets keep making huge expensive and power hungry monolithic cores on more and more expensive nodes. That will work out well for every consumer...
Of course no one said it!
Here is some food for thought:
Where is the Frametime Analysis section from TPU's reviews gone?? ---EDIT: I merely mention TPU as an example, it is a trend i noticed in many other sites like Tom's Hardware etc.
Wondered why GN was forced to present the full frametime plot for ONLY 2 games before casually returning to bars for the rest of the games in their 7800X3D video?
7800X3D being a single chiplet model does not have any noticeable latency penalties in gaming compared to dual chiplet models.
Infact thanks to the massive L3 cache it's frametimes are often better than competitors.
Your "lol" at the end gives me hope that you got what is obviously a humorus exageration.
If you state exaggeration you have not right to complain if someone replies to you with an exaggeration.
Intel is already at 8000 in it's current platform which clearly demonstrates that the next socket will easily max the DDR5 frequency range.
On paper. It's expensive and even Buildzoid who knows a thing or two about RAM OC could not get 8000 stable across all stress tests.
The article is obviously disscussing future products and given that Intel's platform with Gen 5.0 is EOL points to the logical conclusion that their next Chipset will add Gen 6.0 support.
I have not seen any such indication. Even Intel's latest server platform features 5.0. If they introduce 6.0 it will be on server side first.
Also PCIe adoption in general lags years behind 1.0 version certification.
4.0 was released on 2017 but came to mainstream desktop via AMD in 2019.
5.0 was released in 2019 and came to mainstream desktop via AMD in 2022.
6.0 was released just last year and will come in 2025 at the earliest. Neither Zen5 or Meteor Lake/Raptor Lake Refresh will use it in 2024.
The same cannot be said for AMD since their current platform's main advantage is the fact it will stay the same for next CPU release, so Gen 5.0 for them.
Nothing too exciting here, it is just the same as the releases always worked.
That's a good thing for consumer. There and no GPU's and barely any SSD's to even take advantage of 5.0 at this time. And these SSD's are first gen models that fall well short of maxing out the 5.0 link.
Nah, don't really like Intel --> my current system is based on 5800X3D which was an upgrade from my previous 7700X but saddly both were a downgrade from my 12700K i had before, wish i had known better...
At least my averages are still great
Yet you argue for Intel for some reason. I too am on 5800X3D and i dont feel like my temps are high - around 70c max in games. 75W max. Based on HWinfo64 data on last 38 hours uptime with playing games etc.
Nor do i feel this huge latency penalty you keep talking about. In AIDA64 i get less than 60ns in RAM latency test.